Commit 2c4d8cb7 authored by Qu Wenruo's avatar Qu Wenruo Committed by David Sterba

btrfs: explain page locking and readahead in read_extent_buffer_pages()

In read_extent_buffer_pages(), if we failed to lock the page atomically,
we just exit with return value 0.

This is counter-intuitive, as normally if we can't lock what we need, we
would return something like EAGAIN.

But that return hides under (wait == WAIT_NONE) branch, which only gets
triggered for readahead.

And for readahead, if we failed to lock the page, it means the extent
buffer is either being read by other thread, or has been read and is
under modification.  Either way the eb will or has been cached, thus
readahead has no need to wait for it.

Add comment on this counter-intuitive behavior.
Reported-by: default avatarDan Carpenter <dan.carpenter@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: default avatarFilipe Manana <fdmanana@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarQu Wenruo <wqu@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarDavid Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
parent 0bb3eb3e
......@@ -5853,6 +5853,13 @@ int read_extent_buffer_pages(struct extent_buffer *eb, int wait, int mirror_num)
for (i = 0; i < num_pages; i++) {
page = eb->pages[i];
if (wait == WAIT_NONE) {
/*
* WAIT_NONE is only utilized by readahead. If we can't
* acquire the lock atomically it means either the eb
* is being read out or under modification.
* Either way the eb will be or has been cached,
* readahead can exit safely.
*/
if (!trylock_page(page))
goto unlock_exit;
} else {
......
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